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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5-page paper focuses on the concept of consumerism, its positives and negatives. The paper argues that consumerism is not good for soceity. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_MTconsum.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
the original assignment notes). Before beginning with opinions, however, its important to define what, exactly, consumerism is. According to the WorldNet Dictionary,
consumerism is broken down into two parts: first, "a movement advocating greater protection of interests of consumers" and "the theory that an increasing consumption of goods is economically beneficial" (Worldnet
Dictionary). For purposes of this paper, well focus on the latter definition. While its true that from an economic focus, consumerism is probably
beneficial (after all the more that people buy, the more that goods are in demand and the more people are employed to manufacture those goods), consumerism, overall, could be considered
more harmful than beneficial to the human race. To better understand, this, lets examine the history of consumerism, then see how, historically, consumerism has been moved to modern times.
Most scholars point out that the aspect of consumerism came about during the Industrial Revolution, when suddenly mass quantities of luxury goods could be
mass produced for the general market (Glennie 927). The Industrial Revolution also led to further class diversification, as well as more leisure time available on which to spend money on
leisure time activities (Glennie 927). This was true, interestingly enough, when later improvements in material wellbeing even filtered down to the most poverty-stricken (Glennie 929). We even see that today
- the apparently poverty-stricken family that cant afford to pay for its own health insurance, but can seem to afford to pay for luxury appliances, such as big-screen televisions and
luxury cars. This is not to say that all poverty-stricken individuals are in this class, but basically to say that consumerism and poverty can be more of a choice than
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